{"id":290129,"date":"2023-09-09T23:35:53","date_gmt":"2023-09-09T23:35:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/?p=290129"},"modified":"2023-09-09T23:35:53","modified_gmt":"2023-09-09T23:35:53","slug":"teenage-dream-coco-gauffs-rise-to-us-open-champion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/tennis\/teenage-dream-coco-gauffs-rise-to-us-open-champion\/","title":{"rendered":"Teenage dream \u2013 Coco Gauff\u2019s rise to US Open champion"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Coco Gauff fulfilled the script written for her as a 15-year-old by succeeding Serena Williams as America\u2019s first teenage grand slam champion in more than 20 years.<\/p>\n
Williams\u2019 diamond-encrusted and star-studded departure from tennis at Flushing Meadows last year showcased the impact she has had on the sport over 25 years.<\/p>\n
But it also left a big hole, particularly for tennis in the US, where a dearth of male success over the same period has seen its profile wane.<\/p>\n
Now 12 months later, here is Gauff, taking over the baton in seamless fashion and poised to become one of the world\u2019s biggest sporting stars.<\/p>\n
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She showed maturity far beyond her 19 years to recover from a shaky start and defeat Aryna Sabalenka to win her maiden grand slam title in front of an adoring New York crowd.<\/p>\n
While Sabalenka will rise to the world number one ranking on Monday with Gauff at three, it will be the young American\u2019s face on front and back pages now and \u2013 tennis will hope \u2013 for years to come.<\/p>\n
The Williams family has played a huge role in the story of Gauff\u2019s ascent up the tennis ladder. She grew up idolising the sisters, while her first pay check came from playing a young Serena in an advert.<\/p>\n
Speaking about Serena\u2019s influence on her in New York last year, Gauff said: \u201cGrowing up, I never thought that I was different because the number one player in the world was somebody who looked like me.<\/p>\n
\u201cI love that she always elevates herself. Sometimes being a woman, a black woman in the world, you kind of settle for less. I can\u2019t remember a moment in her career or life that she settled for less.\u201d<\/p>\n
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It was Venus rather than Serena, though, who was central to Gauff bursting through on the global stage at Wimbledon in 2019.<\/p>\n
A childhood prodigy who won the US national under-12 title aged 10 and a grand slam junior crown at only 14, she qualified for the women\u2019s singles at SW19 the following year and defeated Venus in the first round.<\/p>\n
Wowing with her serve, backhand, athleticism and a startling maturity, Gauff rode a wave of support through to the fourth round.<\/p>\n
The talk was already of when the teenager would win a grand slam and she has had to handle huge expectations from that moment on, but \u2013 while she will not turn 20 until next March \u2013 the last four years have seen her gain an excellent grounding in the game.<\/p>\n
Gauff has overcome moments of doubt, including a first-round loss at Wimbledon this summer, to maintain a steadily-upward trajectory, reaching her first senior grand slam final at the French Open last summer.<\/p>\n
https:\/\/www.instagram.com\/p\/CA_h1Irg89X<\/p>\n
What makes Gauff, who has already been ranked world number one in doubles, such a huge asset for tennis is not just her performances and potential on court but the person she is away from it.<\/p>\n
A big fan of TikTok and superheroes, Gauff is very much a 21st century American teenager, yet she also uses her platform to advocate for causes she believes in, speaking at a Black Lives Matter rally in her home town of Delray Beach when she was only 16.<\/p>\n
She is a superb talker on a range of subjects, saying earlier this week about handling the spotlight: \u201cAt first I used to think negative things, like, \u2018Why is there so much pressure, why is this so hard\u2019?<\/p>\n
\u201cI realise in a way it\u2019s pressure but it\u2019s not. There are people struggling to feed their families, people who don\u2019t know where their next meal is going to come from, people who have to pay their bills.<\/p>\n
\u201cThat\u2019s real pressure, that\u2019s real hardship, that\u2019s real life. I\u2019m getting paid to do what I love and getting support to do what I love. That\u2019s something that I don\u2019t take for granted.\u201d<\/p>\n
Born in Atlanta to parents Candi and Corey \u2013 Gauff\u2019s given name is Cori but she is universally known as Coco \u2013 who were talented in athletics and basketball, respectively, the family moved to back to Candi and Corey\u2019s home town of Delray Beach in Florida when their daughter was seven to enhance her training opportunities.<\/p>\n
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Gauff\u2019s parents subsequently gave up their careers to coach her, although they have been happy to bring in outside help, with Gauff attending the academy of Serena Williams\u2019 former coach Patrick Mouratoglou and currently working with the hugely-experienced Brad Gilbert.<\/p>\n
There are areas of her game that Gauff can improve, notably a forehand that opponents routinely target, but, at a time of uncertainty for women\u2019s tennis, the teenager is manna from heaven and with so much more to come.<\/p>\n